This should correct the usage strings in both the `--help` and user documentation. Previously, sometimes the name of the utils did not show up correctly.
- Change the main! proc_macro to a bin! macro_rules macro.
- Reexport uucore_procs from uucore
- Make utils to not import uucore_procs directly
- Remove the `syn` dependency and don't parse proc_macro input (hopefully for faster compile times)
This makes clap wrap the help text according to the terminal width,
which improves readability for terminal widths < 120 chars,
because clap defaults to a width of 120 chars without this feature.
* Change unchecked unwrapping to unwrap_or_default for argument parsing (resolving #1845)
* Added unit-testing for the collect_str function on invalid utf8 OsStrs
* Added a warning-message for identification purpose to the collect_str method.
* - Add removal of wrongly encoded empty strings to basename
- Add testing of broken encoding to basename
- Changed UCommand to use collect_str in args method to allow for integration testing of that method
- Change UCommand to use unwarp_or_default in arg method to match the behaviour of collect_str
* Trying out a new pattern for convert_str for getting a feeling of how the API feels with more control
* Adding convenience API for compact calls
* Add new API to everywhere, fix test for basename
* Added unit-testing for the conversion options
* Added unit-testing for the conversion options for windows
* fixed compilation and some merge hiccups
* Remove windows tests in order to make merge request build
* Fix formatting to match rustfmt for the merged file
* Improve documentation of the collect_str method and the unit-tests
* Fix compilation problems with test
Co-authored-by: Christopher Regali <chris.vdop@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sylvestre Ledru <sylvestre@debian.org>
- refactor internal version specifications to be ">=M.m.p" (where M.m.p is *already published*)
## [why]
Loosening internal version dependencies decreases the coupling between packages such
that packages can be published in a looser order. It allows the packages to be version
updated and published in tandem (ie, by using `cargo workspace ...`). Once published,
the internal versions can then be updated (again, to an *already published* package
version), as needed.